As human corruption fills the earth and provokes divine judgment, God shows grace to Noah, establishes His covenant purpose, and provides a means of preservation through obedient faith.
Human Wickedness Fills the Earth, Yet God Preserves Noah Through Grace and Covenant Purpose
As human corruption fills the earth and provokes divine judgment, God shows grace to Noah, establishes His covenant purpose, and provides a means of preservation through obedient faith.
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As human corruption fills the earth and provokes divine judgment, God shows grace to Noah, establishes His covenant purpose, and provides a means of preservation through obedient faith.
Genesis 6 presents the moral collapse of humanity in universal terms and shows that divine judgment is neither impulsive nor unjust, but the righteous response of the holy God to persistent corruption, violence, and evil intention. The chapter emphasizes that the problem is not merely outward behavior, but the inward orientation of the human heart. Evil has become pervasive, continual, and society-wide.
The earth itself is described as corrupted and full of violence, indicating that sin now distorts the entire texture of created life. Yet against this dark backdrop stands the grace of God toward Noah. Noah is not presented as sinless in an absolute sense, but as righteous and blameless in contrast to His generation, one who walks with God. God’s grace does not cancel the reality of judgment, nor does judgment erase the reality of grace.
Instead, both realities are held together. God determines to destroy the corrupt world, but He also provides an ark, speaks covenantally to Noah, and preserves a remnant through whom the human story will continue. Genesis 6 therefore establishes a fundamental biblical pattern: widespread corruption, righteous divine judgment, gracious preservation of a remnant, covenantal continuity, and salvation through God’s appointed means.
Genesis 6 marks a major turning point in the primeval history of Genesis 1–11. What began in Genesis 3 with the first act of rebellion, and expanded in Genesis 4 through murder and violent culture, now reaches a catastrophic scale. Human corruption is no longer seen merely in individuals or families, but in the earth as a whole. The chapter introduces the flood narrative by explaining why divine judgment is about to come upon the world.
At the same time, it also introduces Noah as the preserved righteous man through whom God will continue His purposes. The chapter stands at the intersection of judgment and preservation, showing both the severity of human wickedness and the steadfastness of divine grace. It is foundational for understanding later biblical themes of corruption, judgment, remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and salvation through divine provision.
Human multiplication is accompanied by a troubling corruption associated with the sons of God, the daughters of men, and the Nephilim, setting a tone of increasing disorder.
The Lord sees that human wickedness is great, that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart is only evil continually, and He announces judgment on mankind and the created order.
In sharp contrast to universal corruption, Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord.
Noah is described as righteous, blameless in His generation, and one who walked with God, while the earth is shown to be corrupt and filled with violence.
God reveals His decision to bring a flood of judgment upon all flesh and instructs Noah to build an ark.
God declares His covenant with Noah and gives instructions for preservation of Noah’s household and the animal kinds.
Noah responds in comprehensive obedience, doing all that God commanded Him.
- 6:1–4: Human multiplication is accompanied by a troubling corruption associated with the sons of God, the daughters of men, and the Nephilim, setting a tone of increasing disorder.
- 6:5–7: The Lord sees that human wickedness is great, that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart is only evil continually, and He announces judgment on mankind and the created order.
- 6:8: In sharp contrast to universal corruption, Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord.
- 6:9–12: Noah is described as righteous, blameless in His generation, and one who walked with God, while the earth is shown to be corrupt and filled with violence.
- 6:13–17: God reveals His decision to bring a flood of judgment upon all flesh and instructs Noah to build an ark.
- 6:18–21: God declares His covenant with Noah and gives instructions for preservation of Noah’s household and the animal kinds.
- 6:22: Noah responds in comprehensive obedience, doing all that God commanded Him.
Theological Focus
- Judgment
- Human Depravity
- Grace
- Divine Holiness
- Remnant Preservation
- Covenant
- Obedient Faith
- Salvation Through Divine Provision
- Hamartiology
- Theology Proper
- Soteriology Preparation
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Biblical Theology
Covenant Significance
Genesis 6 is covenantally decisive because it introduces God’s covenantal word to Noah in the context of judgment and preservation. Before the formal covenant ratification language of later flood passages, this chapter already establishes that Noah’s preservation is not accidental, but grounded in God’s covenant purpose. The chapter also demonstrates that covenant grace does not overlook wickedness, but preserves a people through judgment so that God’s purposes in creation and redemption continue.
Noah becomes the covenant head for the post-flood world, and Genesis 6 is the threshold of that transition.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 6 is covenantally decisive because it introduces God’s covenantal word to Noah in the context of judgment and preservation. Before the formal covenant ratification language of later flood passages, this chapter already establishes that Noah’s preservation is not accidental, but grounded in God’s covenant purpose. The chapter also demonstrates that covenant grace does not overlook wickedness, but preserves a people through judgment so that God’s purposes in creation and redemption continue.
Noah becomes the covenant head for the post-flood world, and Genesis 6 is the threshold of that transition.
Genesis 5:28-32
Psalm 14:1-3
Isaiah 24:5-6
Ezekiel 14:14
Habakkuk 2:4
Genesis 5:32
Genesis 7:1-24
Genesis 8:1-22
Romans 3:10-18
Cross References
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 6 contributes to Christology by establishing a pattern of salvation through judgment and preservation through God’s appointed means. Noah, while not the final savior, functions as a typological figure whose obedient faith and God-appointed ark point forward to Christ as the true refuge from divine wrath. The ark itself becomes an early biblical pattern of salvation by grace through God’s provision, not human invention.
Noah as righteous remnant head also anticipates the greater righteous one who secures preservation not merely for a household, but for a redeemed people drawn from every nation.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 6 presents the moral collapse of humanity in universal terms and shows that divine judgment is neither impulsive nor unjust, but the righteous response of the holy God to persistent corruption, violence, and evil intention. The chapter emphasizes that the problem is not merely outward behavior, but the inward orientation of the human heart. Evil has become pervasive, continual, and society-wide.
The earth itself is described as corrupted and full of violence, indicating that sin now distorts the entire texture of created life. Yet against this dark backdrop stands the grace of God toward Noah. Noah is not presented as sinless in an absolute sense, but as righteous and blameless in contrast to His generation, one who walks with God. God’s grace does not cancel the reality of judgment, nor does judgment erase the reality of grace.
Instead, both realities are held together. God determines to destroy the corrupt world, but He also provides an ark, speaks covenantally to Noah, and preserves a remnant through whom the human story will continue. Genesis 6 therefore establishes a fundamental biblical pattern: widespread corruption, righteous divine judgment, gracious preservation of a remnant, covenantal continuity, and salvation through God’s appointed means.
God establishes a covenant relationship that ensures preservation and continuity.
God’s commands are specific, authoritative, and to be followed precisely.
God’s response to sin includes a real expression of sorrow over corruption.
God judges sin decisively when corruption becomes pervasive.
God responds to sin with righteous judgment.
God sees and assesses the condition of humanity accurately.
God limits human lifespan as an act of restraint against escalating sin.
God extends favor to individuals according to His purpose.
Humanity’s corruption deepens as sin spreads across society.
The increase of humanity fulfills creation design but is corrupted by sin.
Persistent and pervasive sin leads to decisive divine judgment.
God’s response signals the approach of judgment upon a corrupt world.
Faith is demonstrated through complete obedience to God’s commands.
God establishes distinctions that are not to be violated.
God recognizes and distinguishes those who live in alignment with Him.
God provides the means by which people are preserved from judgment.
Human sin affects all of creation, resulting in widespread corruption.
Human sin affects the entirety of the person, including thoughts and intentions.
A life lived in relationship with God is central to faithful living.
6 Imperatives
- Build the ark according to God’s design
- Prepare for preservation under divine command
- Bring household and creatures into the ark
- Gather food for the ordained means of survival
Sense favor, grace
Definition favor, grace
Why it matters The statement that Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord establishes grace as the controlling theological contrast to universal corruption.
Sense righteous
Definition righteous
Why it matters Noah’s righteousness marks Him as set apart in moral posture and covenant loyalty within a corrupt generation.
Sense blameless, whole
Definition blameless, whole
Why it matters The term highlights Noah’s integrity and sets Him apart from the moral disintegration of His age.
Sense walk
Definition walk
Why it matters To walk with God identifies Noah with covenant fellowship and faithful life before the Lord, echoing Enoch.
Sense corrupt, destroy
Definition corrupt, destroy
Why it matters The same root is used for the earth being corrupted and for God destroying, linking moral corruption to judicial destruction.
Sense violence
Definition violence
Why it matters Violence becomes a defining feature of the corrupted earth, showing sin’s social and cultural reach.
Sense ark
Definition ark
Why it matters The ark is the God-appointed means of preservation through judgment, making it a major theological symbol of salvation by divine provision.
Sense covenant
Definition covenant
Why it matters The covenant language grounds Noah’s preservation in God’s purposeful, relational commitment rather than mere circumstance.
Sense flood
Definition flood
Why it matters The flood is presented as a unique, world-level act of divine judgment against pervasive corruption.
Sense all flesh
Definition all flesh
Why it matters The phrase stresses the breadth of the judgment and underscores how deeply creation has been implicated in human corruption.
Sense heart
Definition heart
Why it matters The evil of the heart in Genesis 6:5 shows that the source of corruption is internal, not merely environmental or behavioral.
Sense thoughts, intentions
Definition thoughts, intentions
Why it matters The term emphasizes the cognitive and volitional depth of human evil, reinforcing total corruption language.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 6 warns that unchecked human wickedness, violence, and inward corruption provoke the righteous judgment of God, and that no society can persist indefinitely in defiance of Him.
- Treating Genesis 6 mainly as a puzzle about the sons of God while missing the chapter’s dominant burden, the universal corruption of humanity and the certainty of divine judgment.
- Reducing human wickedness to external acts alone and missing the emphasis on the heart, thoughts, and inward intentions.
- Assuming Noah earned salvation by His righteousness rather than recognizing that the chapter first says He found favor, placing grace at the forefront.
- Reading the flood preparation merely as survival planning instead of as covenantal, theological preservation through divine revelation.
- Ignoring the importance of violence as a key manifestation of societal corruption.
- Treating Noah’s obedience as incidental rather than as a major expression of faith under God’s revealed word.
- Do You take seriously the Bible’s diagnosis that sin is rooted in the heart and not merely in outward behavior?
- How does Genesis 6 challenge shallow views of human nature and cultural progress?
- Are You more shaped by the violence and corruption of Your age, or by the call to walk with God?
- What does Noah’s obedience teach You about responding to God’s word before judgment falls?
- Have You truly taken refuge in God’s appointed means of salvation, or are You still assuming that judgment will not come?
- Preach Genesis 6 to expose the seriousness of human depravity and to confront naive optimism about the moral condition of humanity.
- Use the chapter to show that God’s judgment is morally grounded, not arbitrary, and that divine patience must never be confused with indifference.
- Help believers understand that grace does not mean the absence of judgment, but preservation through God’s appointed way.
- Call the church to be like Noah, distinct in a corrupt generation, marked by righteousness, obedience, and fellowship with God.
- Use the ark theme to point clearly to Christ as the only refuge from coming wrath.
- Apply the theme of violence pastorally by showing how a culture of aggression, domination, and moral decay reflects deep rebellion against God.
- Encourage families to think generationally, since Noah’s household is preserved within God’s covenantal design.
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
6
Very high
- Build the ark according to God’s design
- Prepare for preservation under divine command
- Bring household and creatures into the ark
- Gather food for the ordained means of survival
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 6 is covenantally decisive because it introduces God’s covenantal word to Noah in the context of judgment and preservation. Before the formal covenant ratification language of later flood passages, this chapter already establishes that Noah’s preservation is not accidental, but grounded in God’s covenant purpose. The chapter also demonstrates that covenant grace does not overlook wickedness, but preserves a people through judgment so that God’s purposes in creation and redemption continue.
Noah becomes the covenant head for the post-flood world, and Genesis 6 is the threshold of that transition.
Genesis 6 makes clear that humanity is not basically good and merely in need of improvement. The human heart is deeply corrupted, and the earth is filled with violence. God’s response is righteous judgment. Yet the chapter also declares that grace is real. Noah finds favor in the eyes of the Lord, and God provides a means of salvation through the ark. In the fullness of Scripture, this prepares us to see Christ as the greater and final refuge.
Just as Noah and His household were preserved through judgment by entering God’s appointed provision, so sinners are saved from wrath by union with Christ, who alone secures rescue, preservation, and the continuation of God’s redemptive purpose.
Focus Points
- Judgment
- Human Depravity
- Grace
- Divine Holiness
- Remnant Preservation
- Covenant
- Obedient Faith
- Salvation Through Divine Provision
- Hamartiology
- Theology Proper
- Soteriology Preparation
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Biblical Theology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 6:1-4
Gen 6:1-2 Gen 6:1-2 relates to the increase of men generally (האדם, without any restriction), i. e. , of the whole human race; and whilst the moral corruption is represented as universal, the whole human race, with the exception of Noah, who found grace before God (Gen 6:8), is described as ripe for destruction (Gen 6:3 and Gen 6:5-8). To understand this section, and appreciate the causes of this complete degeneracy of the race, we must first obtain a correct interpretation of the expressions “sons of God” (האלהים בני) and “daughters of men” (האדם בנות).
Three different views have been entertained from the very earliest times: the “sons of God” being regarded as ( a ) the sons of princes, ( b ) angels, ( c ) the Sethites or godly men; and the “daughters of men,” as the daughters ( a ) of people of the lower orders, ( b ) of mankind generally, ( c ) of the Cainites, or of the rest of mankind as contrasted with the godly or the children of God. Of these three views, the first, although it has become the traditional one in orthodox rabbinical Judaism, may be dismissed at once as not warranted by the usages of the language, and as altogether unscriptural.
The second, on the contrary, may be defended on two plausible grounds: first, the fact that the “sons of God,” in Job 1:6; Job 2:1, and Job 38:7, and in Dan 3:25, are unquestionably angels (also אלים בּני in Psa 29:1 and Psa 89:7); and secondly, the antithesis, “sons of God” and “daughters of men. ” Apart from the context and tenor of the passage, these two points would lead us most naturally to regard the “sons of God” as angels, in distinction from men and the daughters of men.
But this explanation, though the first to suggest itself, can only lay claim to be received as the correct one, provided the language itself admits of no other. Now that is not the case. For it is not to angels only that the term “sons of Elohim ,” or “sons of Elim,” is applied; but in Psa 73:15, in an address to Elohim , the godly are called “the generation of Thy sons,” i.
e. , sons of Elohim ; in Deu 32:5 the Israelites are called His (God’s) sons, and in Hos 1:10, “sons of the living God;” and in Psa 80:17, Israel is spoken of as the son, whom Elohim has made strong. These passages show that the expression “sons of God” cannot be elucidated by philological means, but must be interpreted by theology alone. Moreover, even when it is applied to the angels, it is questionable whether it is to be understood in a physical or ethical sense.
The notion that “it is employed in a physical sense as nomen naturae , instead of angels as nomen officii , and presupposes generation of a physical kind,” we must reject as an unscriptural and gnostic error. According to the scriptural view, the heavenly spirits are creatures of God, and not begotten from the divine essence. Moreover, all the other terms applied to the angels are ethical in their character.
But if the title “sons of God” cannot involve the notion of physical generation, it cannot be restricted to celestial spirits, but is applicable to all beings which bear the image of God, or by virtue of their likeness to God participate in the glory, power, and blessedness of the divine life, - to men therefore as well as angels, since God has caused man to “want but little of Elohim ,” or to stand but a little behind Elohim (Psa 8:5), so that even magistrates are designated “ Elohim , and sons of the Most High” (Psa 82:6). When Delitzsch objects to the application of the expression “sons of Elohim ” to pious men, because, “although the idea of a child of God may indeed have pointed, even in the O.
T. , beyond its theocratic limitation to Israel (Exo 4:22; Deu 14:1) towards a wider ethical signification (Psa 73:15; Pro 14:26), yet this extension and expansion were not so completed, that in historical prose the terms 'sons of God' (for which 'sons of Jehovah ' should have been used to prevent mistake), and 'sons (or daughters) of men,' could be used to distinguish the children of God and the children of the world,” - this argument rests upon the erroneous supposition, that the expression “sons of God” was introduced by Jehovah for the first time when He selected Israel to be the covenant nation.
So much is true, indeed, that before the adoption of Israel as the first-born son of Jehovah (Exo 4:22), it would have been out of place to speak of sons of Jehovah ; but the notion is false, or at least incapable of proof, that there were not children of God in the olden time, long before Abraham’s call, and that, if there were, they could not have been called “sons of Elohim . ” The idea was not first introduced in connection with the theocracy, and extended thence to a more universal signification.
It had its roots in the divine image, and therefore was general in its application from the very first; and it was not till God in the character of Jehovah chose Abraham and his seed to be the vehicles of salvation, and left the heathen nations to go their own way, that the expression received the specifically theocratic signification of “son of Jehovah ,” to be again liberated and expanded into the more comprehensive idea of νἱοθεσία τοῦ Θεοῦ (i. e.
, Elohim , not τοῦ κυρίου = Jehovah ), at the coming of Christ, the Saviour of all nations. If in the olden time there were pious men who, like Enoch and Noah, walked with Elohim , or who, even if they did not stand in this close priestly relation to God, made the divine image a reality through their piety and fear of God, then there were sons (children) of God, for whom the only correct appellation was “sons of Elohim ,” since sonship to Jehovah was introduced with the call of Israel, so that it could only have been proleptically that the children of God in the old world could be called “sons of Jehovah .
” But if it be still argued, that in mere prose the term “sons of God” could not have been applied to children of God, or pious men, this would be equally applicable to “sons of Jehovah . ” On the other hand, there is this objection to our applying it to angels, that the pious, who walked with God and called upon the name of the Lord, had been mentioned just before, whereas no allusion had been made to angels, not even to their creation.
Again, the antithesis “sons of God” and “daughters of men” does not prove that the former were angels. It by no means follows, that because in Gen 6:1 האדם denotes man as a genus, i. e. , the whole human race, it must do the same in Gen 6:2, where the expression “daughters of men” is determined by the antithesis “sons of God. ” And with reasons existing for understanding by the sons of God and the daughters of men two species of the genus האדם, mentioned in Gen 6:1, no valid objection can be offered to the restriction of האדם, through the antithesis Elohim , to all men with the exception of the sons of God; since this mode of expression is by no means unusual in Hebrew.
“From the expression 'daughters of men ,” as Dettinger observes, “it by no means follows that the sons of God were not men; any more than it follows from Jer 32:20, where it is said that God had done miracles 'in Israel, and among men ,' or from Isa 43:4, where God says He will give men for the Israelites, or from Jdg 16:7, where Samson says, that if he is bound with seven green withs he shall be as weak as a man , for from Psa 73:5, where it is said of the ungodly they are not in trouble as men, that the Israelites, or Samson, or the ungodly, were not men at all. In all these passages אדם (men) denotes the remainder of mankind in distinction from those who are especially named.
” Cases occur, too, even in simple prose, in which the same term is used, first in a general, and then directly afterwards in a more restricted sense. We need cite only one, which occurs in Judg. In Jdg 19:30 reference is made to the coming of the children of Israel (i. e. , of the twelve tribes) out of Egypt; and directly afterwards (Jdg 20:1-2) it is related that “ all the children of Israel,” “all the tribes of Israel,” assembled together (to make war, as we learn from Jdg 20:3.
, upon Benjamin); and in the whole account of the war, Judges 20 and 21, the tribes of Israel are distinguished from the tribe of Benjamin: so that the expression “tribes of Israel” really means the rest of the tribes with the exception of Benjamin. And yet the Benjamites were Israelites. Why then should the fact that the sons of God are distinguished from the daughters of men prove that the former could not be men?
There is not force enough in these two objections to compel us to adopt the conclusion that the sons of God were angels. The question whether the “sons of Elohim ” were celestial or terrestrial sons of God (angels or pious men of the family of Seth) can only be determined from the context, and from the substance of the passage itself, that is to say, from what is related respecting the conduct of the sons of God and its results.
That the connection does not favour the idea of their being angels, is acknowledged even by those who adopt this view. “It cannot be denied,” says Delitzsch , “that the connection of Gen 6:1-8 with Gen 4 necessitates the assumption, that such intermarriages (of the Sethite and Cainite families) did take place about the time of the flood (cf. Mat 24:38; Luk 17:27); and the prohibition of mixed marriages under the law (Exo 34:16; cf.
Gen 27:46; Gen 28:1.) also favours the same idea. ” But this “assumption” is placed beyond all doubt, by what is here related of the sons of God. In Gen 6:2 it is stated that “the sons of God saw the daughters of men, that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose,” i. e. , of any with whose beauty they were charmed; and these wives bare children to them (Gen 6:4).
Now אשּׁה לקח (to take a wife) is a standing expression throughout the whole of the Old Testament for the marriage relation established by God at the creation, and is never applied to πορνεία, or the simple act of physical connection. This is quite sufficient of itself to exclude any reference to angels. For Christ Himself distinctly states that the angels cannot marry (Mat 22:30; Mar 12:25; cf.
Luk 20:34.) And when Kurtz endeavours to weaken the force of these words of Christ, by arguing that they do not prove that it is impossible for angels so to fall from their original holiness as to sink into an unnatural state; this phrase has no meaning, unless by conclusive analogies, or the clear testimony of Scripture, cubits in height. Nor do 2Pe 2:4 and Jud 1:6 furnish any evidence of angel marriages.
Peter is merely speaking of sinning angels in general (ἀγγέλων ἁμαρτησάντων) whom God did not spare, and not of any particular sin on the part of a small number of angels; and Jude describes these angels as τοὺς μὴ τηρήσαντας τὴν ἑαυτῶν ἀρχήν ἀλλὰ ἀπολιπόντας τὸ ἴδιον οἰκητήριον, those who kept not their princedom, their position as rulers, but left their own habitation. There is nothing here about marriages with the daughters of men or the begetting of children, even if we refer the word τούτοις in the clause τὸν ὅμοιον τούτοις τρόπον ἐκπορνεύσασαι in Jud 1:7 to the angels mentioned in Jud 1:6; for ἐκπορνεύειν, the commission of fornication, would be altogether different from marriage, that is to say, from a conjugal bond that was permanent even though unnatural.
But it is neither certain nor probable that this is the connection of τούτοις. Huther , the latest commentator upon this Epistle, who gives the preference to this explanation of τούτοις, and therefore cannot be accused of being biassed by doctrinal prejudices, says distinctly in the 2nd Ed. of his commentary, “τούτοις may be grammatically construed as referring to Sodom and Gomorrah, or per synesin to the inhabitants of these cities; but in that case the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah would only be mentioned indirectly.
” There is nothing in the rules of syntax, therefore, to prevent our connecting the word with Sodom and Gomorrah; and it is not a fact, that “ grammaticae et logicae praecepta compel us to refer this word to the angels,” as G. v. Zeschwitz says. But the very same reason which Huther assigns for not connecting it with Sodom and Gomorrah, may be also assigned for not connecting it with the angels, namely, that in that case the sin of the angels would only be mentioned indirectly.
We regard Philippi's explanation (in his Glaubenslehre iii. p. 303) as a possible one, viz. , that the word τούτοις refers back to the ἄνθρωποι ἀσελγεῖς mentioned in Jud 1:4, and as by no means set aside by De Wette's objection, that the thought of Jud 1:8 would be anticipated in that case; for this objection is fully met by the circumstance, that not only does the word οὗτοι, which is repeated five times from Jud 1:8 onwards, refer back to these men, but even the word τούτοις in Jud 1:14 also.
On the other hand, the reference of τούτοις to the angels is altogether precluded by the clause καὶ ἀπελθοῦσαι ὀπίσω σαρκὸς ἑτέρας, which follows the word ἐκπορνεύσασαι. For fornication on the part of the angels could only consist in their going after flesh, or, as Hoffmann expresses it, “having to do with flesh, for which they were not created,” but not in their going after other , or foreign flesh.
There would be no sense in the word ἑτέρας unless those who were ἐκπορνεύσαντες were themselves possessed of σάρξ; so that this is the only alternative, either we must attribute to the angels a σάρξ or fleshly body, or the idea of referring τούτοις to the angels must be given up. When Kurtz replies to this by saying that “to angels human bodies are quite as much a ἑτέρα σάρξ, i.
e. , a means of sensual gratification opposed to their nature and calling, as man can be to human man,” he hides the difficulty, but does not remove it, by the ambiguous expression “opposed to their nature and calling. ” The ἑτέρα σάρξ must necessarily presuppose an ἰδία σάρξ. But it is thought by some, that even if τούτοις in Jud 1:7 do not refer to the angels in Jud 1:6, the words of Jude agree so thoroughly with the tradition of the book of Enoch respecting the fall of the angels, that we must admit the allusion to the Enoch legend, and so indirectly to Gen 6, since Jude could not have expressed himself more clearly to persons who possessed the book of Enoch, or were acquainted with the tradition it contained.
Now this conclusion would certainly be irresistible, if the only sin of the angels mentioned in the book of Enoch, as that for which they were kept in chains of darkness still the judgment-day, had been their intercourse with human wives. For the fact that Jude was acquainted with the legend of Enoch, and took for granted that the readers of his Epistle were so too, is evident from his introducing a prediction of Enoch in Jud 1:14, Jud 1:15, which is to be found in ch.
i. 9 of Dillmann’s edition of the book of Enoch. But it is admitted by all critical writers upon this book, that in the book of Enoch which has been edited by Dillmann , and is only to be found in an Ethiopic version, there are contradictory legends concerning the fall and judgment of the angels; that the book itself is composed of earlier and later materials; and that those very sections (ch.
6-16:106, etc.) in which the legend of the angel marriages is given without ambiguity, belong to the so-called book of Noah , i. e. , to a later portion of the Enoch legend, which is opposed in many passages to the earlier legend. The fall of the angels is certainly often referred to in the earlier portions of the work; but among all the passages adduced by Dillmann in proof of this, there is only one (19:1) which mentions the angels who had taken wives.
In the others, the only thing mentioned as the sin of the angels or of the hosts of Azazel, is the fact that they were subject to Satan, and seduced those who dwelt on the earth (54:3-6), or that they came down from heaven to earth, and revealed to the children of men what was hidden from them, and then led them astray to the commission of sin (64:2). There is nothing at all here about their taking wives.
Moreover, in the earlier portions of the book, besides the fall of the angels, there is frequent reference made to a fall, i. e. , an act of sin, on the part of the stars of heaven and the army of heaven, which transgressed the commandment of God before they rose, by not appearing at their appointed time (vid. , 18:14-15; 21:3; 90:21, 24, etc.) ; and their punishment and place of punishment are described, in just the same manner as in the case of the wicked angels, as a prison, a lofty and horrible place in which the seven stars of heaven lie bound like great mountains and flaming with fire (21:2-3), as an abyss, narrow and deep, dreadful and dark, in which the star which fell first from heaven is lying, bound hand and foot (88:1, cf.
90:24). From these passages it is quite evident, that the legend concerning the fall of the angels and stars sprang out of Isa 24:21-22 (“And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall visit the host of the height [המּרום צבא, the host of heaven, by which stars and angels are to be understood on high i. e. , the spiritual powers of the heavens] and the kings of the earth upon the earth, and they shall be gathered together, bound in the dungeon, and shut up in prison, and after many days they shall be punished”), along with Isa 14:12 (“How art thou fallen from heaven, thou beautiful morning star!
”), and that the account of the sons of God in Gen 6, as interpreted by those who refer it to the angels, was afterwards combined and amalgamated with it. Now if these different legends, describing the judgment upon the stars that fell from heaven, and the angels that followed Satan in seducing man, in just the same manner as the judgment upon the angels who begot giants from women, were in circulation at the time when the Epistle of Jude was written; we must not interpret the sin of the angels, referred to by Peter and Jude, in a one-sided manner, and arbitrarily connect it with only such passages of the book of Enoch as speak of angel marriages, to the entire disregard of all the other passages, which mention totally different sins as committed by the angels, that are punished with bands of darkness; but we must interpret it from what Jude himself has said concerning this sin, as Peter gives no further explanation of what he means by ἁμαρτῆσαι.
Now the only sins that Jude mentions are μὴ τηρῆσαι τὴν ἑαυτῶν ἀρχήν and ἀπολιπεῖν τὸ ἴδιον οἰκητήριον. The two are closely connected. Through not keeping the ἀρχή (i. e. , the position as rulers in heaven) which belonged to them, and was assigned them at their creation, the angels left “their own habitation” (ἴδιον οἰκητήριον); just as man, when he broke the commandment of God and failed to keep his position as ruler on earth, also lost “his own habitation” (ἴδιον οἰκητήριον), that is to say, not paradise alone, but the holy body of innocence also, so that he needed a covering for his nakedness, and will continue to need it, until we are “clothed upon with our hose which is from heaven” (οἰκητήριον ἡμῶν ἐξ οὐρανοῦ).
In this description of the angels’ sin, there is not the slightest allusion to their leaving heaven to woo the beautiful daughters of men. The words may be very well interpreted, as they were by the earlier Christian theologians, as relating to the fall of Satan and his angels, to whom all that is said concerning their punishment fully applies. If Jude had had the πορνεία of the angels, mentioned in the Enoch legends, in his mind, he would have stated this distinctly, just as he does in v.
9 in the case of the legend concerning Michael and the devil, and in v. 11 in that of Enoch’s prophecy. There was all the more reason for his doing this, because not only to contradictory accounts of the sin of the angels occur in the Enoch legends, but a comparison of the parallels cited from the book of Enoch proves that he deviated from the Enoch legend in points of no little importance.
Thus, for example, according to Enoch 54:3, “ iron chains of immense weight” are prepared for the hosts of Azazel, to put them into the lowest hell, and cast them on that great day into the furnace with flaming fire. Now Jude and Peter say nothing about iron chains, and merely mention “everlasting chains under darkness” and “chains of darkness. ” Again, according to Enoch 10:12, the angel sinners are “bound fast under the earth for seventy generations , till the day of judgment and their completion, till the last judgment shall be held for all eternity.
” Peter and Jude make no allusion to this point of time, and the supporters of the angel marriages, therefore, have thought well to leave it out when quoting this parallel to Jud 1:6. Under these circumstances, the silence of the apostles as to either marriages or fornication on the part of the sinful angels, is a sure sign that they gave no credence to these fables of a Jewish gnosticizing tradition.)
it can be proved that the angels either possess by nature a material corporeality adequate to the contraction of a human marriage, or that by rebellion against their Creator they can acquire it, or that there are some creatures in heaven and on earth which, through sinful degeneracy, or by sinking into an unnatural state, can become possessed of the power, which they have not by nature, of generating and propagating their species. As man could indeed destroy by sin the nature which he had received from his Creator, but could not by his own power restore it when destroyed, to say nothing of implanting an organ or a power that was wanting before; so we cannot believe that angels, through apostasy from God, could acquire sexual power of which they had previously been destitute.
Gen 6:1-2 Gen 6:1-2 relates to the increase of men generally (האדם, without any restriction), i. e. , of the whole human race; and whilst the moral corruption is represented as universal, the whole human race, with the exception of Noah, who found grace before God (Gen 6:8), is described as ripe for destruction (Gen 6:3 and Gen 6:5-8). To understand this section, and appreciate the causes of this complete degeneracy of the race, we must first obtain a correct interpretation of the expressions “sons of God” (האלהים בני) and “daughters of men” (האדם בנות).
Three different views have been entertained from the very earliest times: the “sons of God” being regarded as ( a ) the sons of princes, ( b ) angels, ( c ) the Sethites or godly men; and the “daughters of men,” as the daughters ( a ) of people of the lower orders, ( b ) of mankind generally, ( c ) of the Cainites, or of the rest of mankind as contrasted with the godly or the children of God. Of these three views, the first, although it has become the traditional one in orthodox rabbinical Judaism, may be dismissed at once as not warranted by the usages of the language, and as altogether unscriptural.
The second, on the contrary, may be defended on two plausible grounds: first, the fact that the “sons of God,” in Job 1:6; Job 2:1, and Job 38:7, and in Dan 3:25, are unquestionably angels (also אלים בּני in Psa 29:1 and Psa 89:7); and secondly, the antithesis, “sons of God” and “daughters of men. ” Apart from the context and tenor of the passage, these two points would lead us most naturally to regard the “sons of God” as angels, in distinction from men and the daughters of men.
But this explanation, though the first to suggest itself, can only lay claim to be received as the correct one, provided the language itself admits of no other. Now that is not the case. For it is not to angels only that the term “sons of Elohim ,” or “sons of Elim,” is applied; but in Psa 73:15, in an address to Elohim , the godly are called “the generation of Thy sons,” i.
e. , sons of Elohim ; in Deu 32:5 the Israelites are called His (God’s) sons, and in Hos 1:10, “sons of the living God;” and in Psa 80:17, Israel is spoken of as the son, whom Elohim has made strong. These passages show that the expression “sons of God” cannot be elucidated by philological means, but must be interpreted by theology alone. Moreover, even when it is applied to the angels, it is questionable whether it is to be understood in a physical or ethical sense.
The notion that “it is employed in a physical sense as nomen naturae , instead of angels as nomen officii , and presupposes generation of a physical kind,” we must reject as an unscriptural and gnostic error. According to the scriptural view, the heavenly spirits are creatures of God, and not begotten from the divine essence. Moreover, all the other terms applied to the angels are ethical in their character.
But if the title “sons of God” cannot involve the notion of physical generation, it cannot be restricted to celestial spirits, but is applicable to all beings which bear the image of God, or by virtue of their likeness to God participate in the glory, power, and blessedness of the divine life, - to men therefore as well as angels, since God has caused man to “want but little of Elohim ,” or to stand but a little behind Elohim (Psa 8:5), so that even magistrates are designated “ Elohim , and sons of the Most High” (Psa 82:6). When Delitzsch objects to the application of the expression “sons of Elohim ” to pious men, because, “although the idea of a child of God may indeed have pointed, even in the O.
T. , beyond its theocratic limitation to Israel (Exo 4:22; Deu 14:1) towards a wider ethical signification (Psa 73:15; Pro 14:26), yet this extension and expansion were not so completed, that in historical prose the terms 'sons of God' (for which 'sons of Jehovah ' should have been used to prevent mistake), and 'sons (or daughters) of men,' could be used to distinguish the children of God and the children of the world,” - this argument rests upon the erroneous supposition, that the expression “sons of God” was introduced by Jehovah for the first time when He selected Israel to be the covenant nation.
So much is true, indeed, that before the adoption of Israel as the first-born son of Jehovah (Exo 4:22), it would have been out of place to speak of sons of Jehovah ; but the notion is false, or at least incapable of proof, that there were not children of God in the olden time, long before Abraham’s call, and that, if there were, they could not have been called “sons of Elohim . ” The idea was not first introduced in connection with the theocracy, and extended thence to a more universal signification.
It had its roots in the divine image, and therefore was general in its application from the very first; and it was not till God in the character of Jehovah chose Abraham and his seed to be the vehicles of salvation, and left the heathen nations to go their own way, that the expression received the specifically theocratic signification of “son of Jehovah ,” to be again liberated and expanded into the more comprehensive idea of νἱοθεσία τοῦ Θεοῦ (i. e.
, Elohim , not τοῦ κυρίου = Jehovah ), at the coming of Christ, the Saviour of all nations. If in the olden time there were pious men who, like Enoch and Noah, walked with Elohim , or who, even if they did not stand in this close priestly relation to God, made the divine image a reality through their piety and fear of God, then there were sons (children) of God, for whom the only correct appellation was “sons of Elohim ,” since sonship to Jehovah was introduced with the call of Israel, so that it could only have been proleptically that the children of God in the old world could be called “sons of Jehovah .
” But if it be still argued, that in mere prose the term “sons of God” could not have been applied to children of God, or pious men, this would be equally applicable to “sons of Jehovah . ” On the other hand, there is this objection to our applying it to angels, that the pious, who walked with God and called upon the name of the Lord, had been mentioned just before, whereas no allusion had been made to angels, not even to their creation.
Again, the antithesis “sons of God” and “daughters of men” does not prove that the former were angels. It by no means follows, that because in Gen 6:1 האדם denotes man as a genus, i. e. , the whole human race, it must do the same in Gen 6:2, where the expression “daughters of men” is determined by the antithesis “sons of God. ” And with reasons existing for understanding by the sons of God and the daughters of men two species of the genus האדם, mentioned in Gen 6:1, no valid objection can be offered to the restriction of האדם, through the antithesis Elohim , to all men with the exception of the sons of God; since this mode of expression is by no means unusual in Hebrew.
“From the expression 'daughters of men ,” as Dettinger observes, “it by no means follows that the sons of God were not men; any more than it follows from Jer 32:20, where it is said that God had done miracles 'in Israel, and among men ,' or from Isa 43:4, where God says He will give men for the Israelites, or from Jdg 16:7, where Samson says, that if he is bound with seven green withs he shall be as weak as a man , for from Psa 73:5, where it is said of the ungodly they are not in trouble as men, that the Israelites, or Samson, or the ungodly, were not men at all. In all these passages אדם (men) denotes the remainder of mankind in distinction from those who are especially named.
” Cases occur, too, even in simple prose, in which the same term is used, first in a general, and then directly afterwards in a more restricted sense. We need cite only one, which occurs in Judg. In Jdg 19:30 reference is made to the coming of the children of Israel (i. e. , of the twelve tribes) out of Egypt; and directly afterwards (Jdg 20:1-2) it is related that “ all the children of Israel,” “all the tribes of Israel,” assembled together (to make war, as we learn from Jdg 20:3.
, upon Benjamin); and in the whole account of the war, Judges 20 and 21, the tribes of Israel are distinguished from the tribe of Benjamin: so that the expression “tribes of Israel” really means the rest of the tribes with the exception of Benjamin. And yet the Benjamites were Israelites. Why then should the fact that the sons of God are distinguished from the daughters of men prove that the former could not be men?
There is not force enough in these two objections to compel us to adopt the conclusion that the sons of God were angels. The question whether the “sons of Elohim ” were celestial or terrestrial sons of God (angels or pious men of the family of Seth) can only be determined from the context, and from the substance of the passage itself, that is to say, from what is related respecting the conduct of the sons of God and its results.
That the connection does not favour the idea of their being angels, is acknowledged even by those who adopt this view. “It cannot be denied,” says Delitzsch , “that the connection of Gen 6:1-8 with Gen 4 necessitates the assumption, that such intermarriages (of the Sethite and Cainite families) did take place about the time of the flood (cf. Mat 24:38; Luk 17:27); and the prohibition of mixed marriages under the law (Exo 34:16; cf.
Gen 27:46; Gen 28:1.) also favours the same idea. ” But this “assumption” is placed beyond all doubt, by what is here related of the sons of God. In Gen 6:2 it is stated that “the sons of God saw the daughters of men, that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose,” i. e. , of any with whose beauty they were charmed; and these wives bare children to them (Gen 6:4).
Now אשּׁה לקח (to take a wife) is a standing expression throughout the whole of the Old Testament for the marriage relation established by God at the creation, and is never applied to πορνεία, or the simple act of physical connection. This is quite sufficient of itself to exclude any reference to angels. For Christ Himself distinctly states that the angels cannot marry (Mat 22:30; Mar 12:25; cf.
Luk 20:34.) And when Kurtz endeavours to weaken the force of these words of Christ, by arguing that they do not prove that it is impossible for angels so to fall from their original holiness as to sink into an unnatural state; this phrase has no meaning, unless by conclusive analogies, or the clear testimony of Scripture, cubits in height. Nor do 2Pe 2:4 and Jud 1:6 furnish any evidence of angel marriages.
Peter is merely speaking of sinning angels in general (ἀγγέλων ἁμαρτησάντων) whom God did not spare, and not of any particular sin on the part of a small number of angels; and Jude describes these angels as τοὺς μὴ τηρήσαντας τὴν ἑαυτῶν ἀρχήν ἀλλὰ ἀπολιπόντας τὸ ἴδιον οἰκητήριον, those who kept not their princedom, their position as rulers, but left their own habitation. There is nothing here about marriages with the daughters of men or the begetting of children, even if we refer the word τούτοις in the clause τὸν ὅμοιον τούτοις τρόπον ἐκπορνεύσασαι in Jud 1:7 to the angels mentioned in Jud 1:6; for ἐκπορνεύειν, the commission of fornication, would be altogether different from marriage, that is to say, from a conjugal bond that was permanent even though unnatural.
But it is neither certain nor probable that this is the connection of τούτοις. Huther , the latest commentator upon this Epistle, who gives the preference to this explanation of τούτοις, and therefore cannot be accused of being biassed by doctrinal prejudices, says distinctly in the 2nd Ed. of his commentary, “τούτοις may be grammatically construed as referring to Sodom and Gomorrah, or per synesin to the inhabitants of these cities; but in that case the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah would only be mentioned indirectly.
” There is nothing in the rules of syntax, therefore, to prevent our connecting the word with Sodom and Gomorrah; and it is not a fact, that “ grammaticae et logicae praecepta compel us to refer this word to the angels,” as G. v. Zeschwitz says. But the very same reason which Huther assigns for not connecting it with Sodom and Gomorrah, may be also assigned for not connecting it with the angels, namely, that in that case the sin of the angels would only be mentioned indirectly.
We regard Philippi's explanation (in his Glaubenslehre iii. p. 303) as a possible one, viz. , that the word τούτοις refers back to the ἄνθρωποι ἀσελγεῖς mentioned in Jud 1:4, and as by no means set aside by De Wette's objection, that the thought of Jud 1:8 would be anticipated in that case; for this objection is fully met by the circumstance, that not only does the word οὗτοι, which is repeated five times from Jud 1:8 onwards, refer back to these men, but even the word τούτοις in Jud 1:14 also.
On the other hand, the reference of τούτοις to the angels is altogether precluded by the clause καὶ ἀπελθοῦσαι ὀπίσω σαρκὸς ἑτέρας, which follows the word ἐκπορνεύσασαι. For fornication on the part of the angels could only consist in their going after flesh, or, as Hoffmann expresses it, “having to do with flesh, for which they were not created,” but not in their going after other , or foreign flesh.
There would be no sense in the word ἑτέρας unless those who were ἐκπορνεύσαντες were themselves possessed of σάρξ; so that this is the only alternative, either we must attribute to the angels a σάρξ or fleshly body, or the idea of referring τούτοις to the angels must be given up. When Kurtz replies to this by saying that “to angels human bodies are quite as much a ἑτέρα σάρξ, i.
e. , a means of sensual gratification opposed to their nature and calling, as man can be to human man,” he hides the difficulty, but does not remove it, by the ambiguous expression “opposed to their nature and calling. ” The ἑτέρα σάρξ must necessarily presuppose an ἰδία σάρξ. But it is thought by some, that even if τούτοις in Jud 1:7 do not refer to the angels in Jud 1:6, the words of Jude agree so thoroughly with the tradition of the book of Enoch respecting the fall of the angels, that we must admit the allusion to the Enoch legend, and so indirectly to Gen 6, since Jude could not have expressed himself more clearly to persons who possessed the book of Enoch, or were acquainted with the tradition it contained.
Now this conclusion would certainly be irresistible, if the only sin of the angels mentioned in the book of Enoch, as that for which they were kept in chains of darkness still the judgment-day, had been their intercourse with human wives. For the fact that Jude was acquainted with the legend of Enoch, and took for granted that the readers of his Epistle were so too, is evident from his introducing a prediction of Enoch in Jud 1:14, Jud 1:15, which is to be found in ch.
i. 9 of Dillmann’s edition of the book of Enoch. But it is admitted by all critical writers upon this book, that in the book of Enoch which has been edited by Dillmann , and is only to be found in an Ethiopic version, there are contradictory legends concerning the fall and judgment of the angels; that the book itself is composed of earlier and later materials; and that those very sections (ch.
6-16:106, etc.) in which the legend of the angel marriages is given without ambiguity, belong to the so-called book of Noah , i. e. , to a later portion of the Enoch legend, which is opposed in many passages to the earlier legend. The fall of the angels is certainly often referred to in the earlier portions of the work; but among all the passages adduced by Dillmann in proof of this, there is only one (19:1) which mentions the angels who had taken wives.
In the others, the only thing mentioned as the sin of the angels or of the hosts of Azazel, is the fact that they were subject to Satan, and seduced those who dwelt on the earth (54:3-6), or that they came down from heaven to earth, and revealed to the children of men what was hidden from them, and then led them astray to the commission of sin (64:2). There is nothing at all here about their taking wives.
Moreover, in the earlier portions of the book, besides the fall of the angels, there is frequent reference made to a fall, i. e. , an act of sin, on the part of the stars of heaven and the army of heaven, which transgressed the commandment of God before they rose, by not appearing at their appointed time (vid. , 18:14-15; 21:3; 90:21, 24, etc.) ; and their punishment and place of punishment are described, in just the same manner as in the case of the wicked angels, as a prison, a lofty and horrible place in which the seven stars of heaven lie bound like great mountains and flaming with fire (21:2-3), as an abyss, narrow and deep, dreadful and dark, in which the star which fell first from heaven is lying, bound hand and foot (88:1, cf.
90:24). From these passages it is quite evident, that the legend concerning the fall of the angels and stars sprang out of Isa 24:21-22 (“And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall visit the host of the height [המּרום צבא, the host of heaven, by which stars and angels are to be understood on high i. e. , the spiritual powers of the heavens] and the kings of the earth upon the earth, and they shall be gathered together, bound in the dungeon, and shut up in prison, and after many days they shall be punished”), along with Isa 14:12 (“How art thou fallen from heaven, thou beautiful morning star!
”), and that the account of the sons of God in Gen 6, as interpreted by those who refer it to the angels, was afterwards combined and amalgamated with it. Now if these different legends, describing the judgment upon the stars that fell from heaven, and the angels that followed Satan in seducing man, in just the same manner as the judgment upon the angels who begot giants from women, were in circulation at the time when the Epistle of Jude was written; we must not interpret the sin of the angels, referred to by Peter and Jude, in a one-sided manner, and arbitrarily connect it with only such passages of the book of Enoch as speak of angel marriages, to the entire disregard of all the other passages, which mention totally different sins as committed by the angels, that are punished with bands of darkness; but we must interpret it from what Jude himself has said concerning this sin, as Peter gives no further explanation of what he means by ἁμαρτῆσαι.
Now the only sins that Jude mentions are μὴ τηρῆσαι τὴν ἑαυτῶν ἀρχήν and ἀπολιπεῖν τὸ ἴδιον οἰκητήριον. The two are closely connected. Through not keeping the ἀρχή (i. e. , the position as rulers in heaven) which belonged to them, and was assigned them at their creation, the angels left “their own habitation” (ἴδιον οἰκητήριον); just as man, when he broke the commandment of God and failed to keep his position as ruler on earth, also lost “his own habitation” (ἴδιον οἰκητήριον), that is to say, not paradise alone, but the holy body of innocence also, so that he needed a covering for his nakedness, and will continue to need it, until we are “clothed upon with our hose which is from heaven” (οἰκητήριον ἡμῶν ἐξ οὐρανοῦ).
In this description of the angels’ sin, there is not the slightest allusion to their leaving heaven to woo the beautiful daughters of men. The words may be very well interpreted, as they were by the earlier Christian theologians, as relating to the fall of Satan and his angels, to whom all that is said concerning their punishment fully applies. If Jude had had the πορνεία of the angels, mentioned in the Enoch legends, in his mind, he would have stated this distinctly, just as he does in v.
9 in the case of the legend concerning Michael and the devil, and in v. 11 in that of Enoch’s prophecy. There was all the more reason for his doing this, because not only to contradictory accounts of the sin of the angels occur in the Enoch legends, but a comparison of the parallels cited from the book of Enoch proves that he deviated from the Enoch legend in points of no little importance.
Thus, for example, according to Enoch 54:3, “ iron chains of immense weight” are prepared for the hosts of Azazel, to put them into the lowest hell, and cast them on that great day into the furnace with flaming fire. Now Jude and Peter say nothing about iron chains, and merely mention “everlasting chains under darkness” and “chains of darkness. ” Again, according to Enoch 10:12, the angel sinners are “bound fast under the earth for seventy generations , till the day of judgment and their completion, till the last judgment shall be held for all eternity.
” Peter and Jude make no allusion to this point of time, and the supporters of the angel marriages, therefore, have thought well to leave it out when quoting this parallel to Jud 1:6. Under these circumstances, the silence of the apostles as to either marriages or fornication on the part of the sinful angels, is a sure sign that they gave no credence to these fables of a Jewish gnosticizing tradition.)
it can be proved that the angels either possess by nature a material corporeality adequate to the contraction of a human marriage, or that by rebellion against their Creator they can acquire it, or that there are some creatures in heaven and on earth which, through sinful degeneracy, or by sinking into an unnatural state, can become possessed of the power, which they have not by nature, of generating and propagating their species. As man could indeed destroy by sin the nature which he had received from his Creator, but could not by his own power restore it when destroyed, to say nothing of implanting an organ or a power that was wanting before; so we cannot believe that angels, through apostasy from God, could acquire sexual power of which they had previously been destitute.
Gen 6:3 The sentence of God upon the “sons of God” is also appropriate to men only. “ Jehovah said: My spirit shall not rule in men for ever; in their wandering they are flesh . ” “The verb דּוּן = דּין signifies to rule (hence אדון the ruler), and to judge, as the consequence of ruling. רוּה is the divine spirit of life bestowed upon man, the principle of physical and ethical, natural and spiritual life.
This His spirit God will withdraw from man, and thereby put an end to their life and conduct. בּשׁגּם is regarded by many as a particle, compounded of בּ, שׁ a contraction of אשׁר, and גּם (also), used in the sense of quoniam , because, (בּשׁ = בּאשׁר, as שׁ or שׁ = אשׁר Jdg 5:7; Jdg 6:17; Sol 1:7). But the objection to this explanation is, that the גּם, “because he also is flesh,” introduces an incongruous emphasis into the clause.
We therefore prefer to regard שׁגּם as the inf . of שׁגג = שׁגה with the suffix: “ in their erring (that of men) he (man as a genus) is flesh; ” an explanation to which, to our mind, the extremely harsh change of number ( they, he ), is no objection, since many examples might be adduced of a similar change (vid. , Hupfeld on Psa 5:10). Men, says God, have proved themselves by their erring and straying to be flesh, i.
e. , given up to the flesh, and incapable of being ruled by the Spirit of God and led back to the divine goal of their life. בּשׂר is used already in its ethical signification, like σάρξ in the New Testament, denoting not merely the natural corporeality of man, but his materiality as rendered ungodly by sin. “ Therefore his days shall be 120 years: ” this means, not that human life should in future never attain a greater age than 120 years, but that a respite of 120 years should still be granted to the human race.
This sentence, as we may gather from the context, was made known to Noah in his 480th year, to be published by him as “preacher of righteousness” (2Pe 2:5) to the degenerate race. The reason why men had gone so far astray, that God determined to withdraw His spirit and give them up to destruction, was that the sons of God had taken wives of such of the daughters of men as they chose.
Can this mean, because angels had formed marriages with the daughters of men? Even granting that such marriages, as being unnatural connections, would have led to the complete corruption of human nature; the men would in that case have been the tempted, and the real authors of the corruption would have been the angels. Why then should judgment fall upon the tempted alone?
The judgments of God in the world are not executed with such partiality as this. And the supposition that nothing is said about the punishment of the angels, because the narrative has to do with the history of man, and the spiritual world is intentionally veiled as much as possible, does not meet the difficulty. If the sons of God were angels, the narrative is concerned not only with men, but with angels also; and it is not the custom of the Scriptures merely to relate the judgments which fall upon the tempted, and say nothing at all about the tempters.
For the contrary, see Gen 3:14. If the “sons of God” were not men, so as to be included in the term אדם, the punishment would need to be specially pointed out in their case, and no deep revelations of the spiritual world would be required, since these celestial tempters would be living with men upon the earth, when they had taken wives from among their daughters.
The judgments of God are not only free from all unrighteousness, but avoid every kind of partiality.
Gen 6:4 “ The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them: these are the heroes (הגּבּרים) who from the olden time (מעולם, as in Psa 25:6; 1Sa 27:8) are the men of name ” (i. e. , noted, renowned or notorious men). נפילים, from נפל to fall upon (Job 1:15; Jos 11:7), signifies the invaders (ἐπιπίπτοντες Aq.
, βιαῖοι Sym.) Luther gives the correct meaning, “tyrants:” they were called Nephilim because they fell upon the people and oppressed them. The meaning of the verse is a subject of dispute. To an unprejudiced mind, the words, as they stand, represent the Nephilim , who were on the earth in those days, as existing before the sons of God began to marry the daughters of men, and clearly distinguish them from the fruits of these marriages.
היוּ can no more be rendered “they became, or arose,” in this connection, than היה in Gen 1:2. ויּהיוּ would have been the proper word. The expression “in those days” refers most naturally to the time when God pronounced the sentence upon the degenerate race; but it is so general and comprehensive a term, that it must not be confined exclusively to that time, not merely because the divine sentence was first pronounced after these marriages were contracted, and the marriages, if they did not produce the corruption, raised it to that fulness of iniquity which was ripe for the judgment, but still more because the words “after that” represent the marriages which drew down the judgment as an event that followed the appearance of the Nephilim .
“ The same were mighty men: ” this might point back to the Nephilim ; but it is a more natural supposition, that it refers to the children born to the sons of God. “These,” i. e. , the sons sprung from those marriages, “are the heroes, those renowned heroes of old. ” Now if, according to the simple meaning of the passage, the Nephilim were in existence at the very time when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, the appearance of the Nephilim cannot afford the slightest evidence that the “sons of God” were angels, by whom a family of monsters were begotten, whether demigods, daemons, or angel-men.
Gen 6:5-8 Now when the wickedness of man became great, and “ every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil the whole day ,” i. e. , continually and altogether evil, it repented God that He had made man, and He determined to destroy them. This determination and the motive assigned are also irreconcilable with the angel-theory. “Had the godless race, which God destroyed by the flood, sprung either entirely or in part from the marriage of angels to the daughters of men, it would no longer have been the race first created by God in Adam, but a grotesque product of the Adamitic factor created by God, and an entirely foreign and angelic factor” ( Phil .)
The force of ינּחם, “it repented the Lord,” may be gathered from the explanatory יתעצּב, “it grieved Him at His heart. ” This shows that the repentance of God does not presuppose any variableness in His nature of His purposes. In this sense God never repents of anything (1Sa 15:29), “ quia nihil illi inopinatum vel non praevisum accidit ” ( Calvin ). The repentance of God is an anthropomorphic expression for the pain of the divine love at the sin of man, and signifies that “God is hurt no less by the atrocious sins of men than if they pierced His heart with mortal anguish” ( Calvin ).
The destruction of all, “from man unto beast,” etc. , is to be explained on the ground of the sovereignty of man upon the earth, the irrational creatures being created for him, and therefore involved in his fall. This destruction, however, was not to bring the human race to an end. “Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. ” In these words mercy is seen in the midst of wrath, pledging the preservation and restoration of humanity.
Gen 6:9-12 contain a description of Noah and his contemporaries; Gen 6:13-22, the announcement of the purpose of God with reference to the flood.
Gen 6:5-8 Now when the wickedness of man became great, and “ every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil the whole day ,” i. e. , continually and altogether evil, it repented God that He had made man, and He determined to destroy them. This determination and the motive assigned are also irreconcilable with the angel-theory. “Had the godless race, which God destroyed by the flood, sprung either entirely or in part from the marriage of angels to the daughters of men, it would no longer have been the race first created by God in Adam, but a grotesque product of the Adamitic factor created by God, and an entirely foreign and angelic factor” ( Phil .)
The force of ינּחם, “it repented the Lord,” may be gathered from the explanatory יתעצּב, “it grieved Him at His heart. ” This shows that the repentance of God does not presuppose any variableness in His nature of His purposes. In this sense God never repents of anything (1Sa 15:29), “ quia nihil illi inopinatum vel non praevisum accidit ” ( Calvin ). The repentance of God is an anthropomorphic expression for the pain of the divine love at the sin of man, and signifies that “God is hurt no less by the atrocious sins of men than if they pierced His heart with mortal anguish” ( Calvin ).
The destruction of all, “from man unto beast,” etc. , is to be explained on the ground of the sovereignty of man upon the earth, the irrational creatures being created for him, and therefore involved in his fall. This destruction, however, was not to bring the human race to an end. “Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. ” In these words mercy is seen in the midst of wrath, pledging the preservation and restoration of humanity.
Gen 6:9-12 contain a description of Noah and his contemporaries; Gen 6:13-22, the announcement of the purpose of God with reference to the flood.
Gen 6:5-8 Now when the wickedness of man became great, and “ every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil the whole day ,” i. e. , continually and altogether evil, it repented God that He had made man, and He determined to destroy them. This determination and the motive assigned are also irreconcilable with the angel-theory. “Had the godless race, which God destroyed by the flood, sprung either entirely or in part from the marriage of angels to the daughters of men, it would no longer have been the race first created by God in Adam, but a grotesque product of the Adamitic factor created by God, and an entirely foreign and angelic factor” ( Phil .)
The force of ינּחם, “it repented the Lord,” may be gathered from the explanatory יתעצּב, “it grieved Him at His heart. ” This shows that the repentance of God does not presuppose any variableness in His nature of His purposes. In this sense God never repents of anything (1Sa 15:29), “ quia nihil illi inopinatum vel non praevisum accidit ” ( Calvin ). The repentance of God is an anthropomorphic expression for the pain of the divine love at the sin of man, and signifies that “God is hurt no less by the atrocious sins of men than if they pierced His heart with mortal anguish” ( Calvin ).
The destruction of all, “from man unto beast,” etc. , is to be explained on the ground of the sovereignty of man upon the earth, the irrational creatures being created for him, and therefore involved in his fall. This destruction, however, was not to bring the human race to an end. “Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. ” In these words mercy is seen in the midst of wrath, pledging the preservation and restoration of humanity.
Gen 6:9-12 contain a description of Noah and his contemporaries; Gen 6:13-22, the announcement of the purpose of God with reference to the flood.
Gen 6:5-8 Now when the wickedness of man became great, and “ every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil the whole day ,” i. e. , continually and altogether evil, it repented God that He had made man, and He determined to destroy them. This determination and the motive assigned are also irreconcilable with the angel-theory. “Had the godless race, which God destroyed by the flood, sprung either entirely or in part from the marriage of angels to the daughters of men, it would no longer have been the race first created by God in Adam, but a grotesque product of the Adamitic factor created by God, and an entirely foreign and angelic factor” ( Phil .)
The force of ינּחם, “it repented the Lord,” may be gathered from the explanatory יתעצּב, “it grieved Him at His heart. ” This shows that the repentance of God does not presuppose any variableness in His nature of His purposes. In this sense God never repents of anything (1Sa 15:29), “ quia nihil illi inopinatum vel non praevisum accidit ” ( Calvin ). The repentance of God is an anthropomorphic expression for the pain of the divine love at the sin of man, and signifies that “God is hurt no less by the atrocious sins of men than if they pierced His heart with mortal anguish” ( Calvin ).
The destruction of all, “from man unto beast,” etc. , is to be explained on the ground of the sovereignty of man upon the earth, the irrational creatures being created for him, and therefore involved in his fall. This destruction, however, was not to bring the human race to an end. “Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. ” In these words mercy is seen in the midst of wrath, pledging the preservation and restoration of humanity.
Gen 6:9-12 contain a description of Noah and his contemporaries; Gen 6:13-22, the announcement of the purpose of God with reference to the flood.
Gen 6:9 “ Noah, a righteous man, was blameless among his generations: ” righteous in his moral relation to God; blameless (τέλειος, integer ) in his character and conduct. דּרות, γενεαί, were the generations or families “which passed by Noah, the Nestor of his time.” His righteousness and integrity were manifested in his walking with God, in which he resembled Enoch (Gen 5:22).
Gen 6:10-12 In Gen 6:10-12, the account of the birth of his three sons, and of the corruption of all flesh, is repeated. This corruption is represented as corrupting the whole earth and filling it with wickedness; and thus the judgment of the flood is for the first time fully accounted for. “ The earth was corrupt before God ( Elohim points back to the previous Elohim in Gen 6:9),” it became so conspicuous to God, that He could not refrain from punishment.
The corruption proceeded from the fact, that “ all flesh ” - i. e. , the whole human race which had resisted the influence of the Spirit of God and become flesh (see Gen 6:3) - “ had corrupted its way . ” The term “flesh” in Gen 6:12 cannot include the animal world, since the expression, “corrupted its way,” is applicable to man alone. The fact that in Gen 6:13 and Gen 6:17 this term embraces both men and animals is no proof to the contrary, for the simple reason, that in Gen 6:19 “all flesh” denotes the animal world only, an evident proof that the precise meaning of the word must always be determined from the context.
Gen 6:10-12 In Gen 6:10-12, the account of the birth of his three sons, and of the corruption of all flesh, is repeated. This corruption is represented as corrupting the whole earth and filling it with wickedness; and thus the judgment of the flood is for the first time fully accounted for. “ The earth was corrupt before God ( Elohim points back to the previous Elohim in Gen 6:9),” it became so conspicuous to God, that He could not refrain from punishment.
The corruption proceeded from the fact, that “ all flesh ” - i. e. , the whole human race which had resisted the influence of the Spirit of God and become flesh (see Gen 6:3) - “ had corrupted its way . ” The term “flesh” in Gen 6:12 cannot include the animal world, since the expression, “corrupted its way,” is applicable to man alone. The fact that in Gen 6:13 and Gen 6:17 this term embraces both men and animals is no proof to the contrary, for the simple reason, that in Gen 6:19 “all flesh” denotes the animal world only, an evident proof that the precise meaning of the word must always be determined from the context.
Gen 6:10-12 In Gen 6:10-12, the account of the birth of his three sons, and of the corruption of all flesh, is repeated. This corruption is represented as corrupting the whole earth and filling it with wickedness; and thus the judgment of the flood is for the first time fully accounted for. “ The earth was corrupt before God ( Elohim points back to the previous Elohim in Gen 6:9),” it became so conspicuous to God, that He could not refrain from punishment.
The corruption proceeded from the fact, that “ all flesh ” - i. e. , the whole human race which had resisted the influence of the Spirit of God and become flesh (see Gen 6:3) - “ had corrupted its way . ” The term “flesh” in Gen 6:12 cannot include the animal world, since the expression, “corrupted its way,” is applicable to man alone. The fact that in Gen 6:13 and Gen 6:17 this term embraces both men and animals is no proof to the contrary, for the simple reason, that in Gen 6:19 “all flesh” denotes the animal world only, an evident proof that the precise meaning of the word must always be determined from the context.
Gen 6:13 “ The end of all flesh is come before Me . ” אל בּוא, when applied to rumours, invariably signifies “to reach the ear” (vid. , Gen 18:21; Exo 3:9; Est 9:11); hence לפני בּא in this case cannot mean a me constitutus est ( Ges. ). קץ, therefore, is not the end in the sense of destruction, but the end (extremity) of depravity or corruption, which leads to destruction.
“ For the earth has become full of wickedness מפּגיהם,” i. e. , proceeding from them, “ and I destroy them along with the earth . ” Because all flesh had destroyed its way, it should be destroyed with the earth by God. The lex talionis is obvious here.
Gen 6:14-15 Noah was exempted from the extermination. He was to build an ark, in order that he himself, his family, and the animals might be preserved. תּבה, which is only used here and in Exo 2:3, Exo 2:5, where it is applied to the ark in which Moses was placed, is probably an Egyptian word: the lxx render it κίβωτος here, and θίβη in Exodus; the Vulgate arca , from which our word ark is derived.
Gopher-wood ( ligna bituminata ; Jerome ) is most likely cypress . The ἁπ. λεγ. gopher is related to כּפר, resin, and κυπάρισσος; it is no proof to the contrary that in later Hebrew the cypress is called berosh , for gopher belongs to the pre-Hebraic times. The ark was to be made cells, i. e. , divided into cells, קנּים (lit. , nests, niduli , mansiunculae ), and pitched (כּפר denom.
from כּפר) within and without with copher , or asphalte (lxx ἄσφαλτος, Vulg . bitumen ). On the supposition, which is a very probable one, that the ark was built in the form not of a ship, but of a chest, with flat bottom, like a floating house, as it was not meant for sailing, but merely to float upon the water, the dimensions, 300 cubits long, 50 broad, and 30 high, give a superficial area of 15,000 square cubits, and a cubic measurement of 450,000 cubits, probably to the ordinary standard, “after the elbow of a man” (Deu 3:11), i.
e. , measured from the elbow to the end of the middle finger.
Gen 6:14-15 Noah was exempted from the extermination. He was to build an ark, in order that he himself, his family, and the animals might be preserved. תּבה, which is only used here and in Exo 2:3, Exo 2:5, where it is applied to the ark in which Moses was placed, is probably an Egyptian word: the lxx render it κίβωτος here, and θίβη in Exodus; the Vulgate arca , from which our word ark is derived.
Gopher-wood ( ligna bituminata ; Jerome ) is most likely cypress . The ἁπ. λεγ. gopher is related to כּפר, resin, and κυπάρισσος; it is no proof to the contrary that in later Hebrew the cypress is called berosh , for gopher belongs to the pre-Hebraic times. The ark was to be made cells, i. e. , divided into cells, קנּים (lit. , nests, niduli , mansiunculae ), and pitched (כּפר denom.
from כּפר) within and without with copher , or asphalte (lxx ἄσφαλτος, Vulg . bitumen ). On the supposition, which is a very probable one, that the ark was built in the form not of a ship, but of a chest, with flat bottom, like a floating house, as it was not meant for sailing, but merely to float upon the water, the dimensions, 300 cubits long, 50 broad, and 30 high, give a superficial area of 15,000 square cubits, and a cubic measurement of 450,000 cubits, probably to the ordinary standard, “after the elbow of a man” (Deu 3:11), i.
e. , measured from the elbow to the end of the middle finger.
Gen 6:16 “ Light shalt thou make to the ark, and in a cubit from above shalt thou finish it . ” As the meaning light for צהר is established by the word צהרים, “double-light” or mid-day, the passage can only signify that a hole or opening for light and air was to be so constructed as to reach within a cubit of the edge of the roof. A window only a cubit square could not possibly be intended; for צהר is not synonymous with חלּון (Gen 8:6), but signifies, generally, a space for light, or by which light could be admitted into the ark, and in which the window, or lattice for opening and shutting, could be fixed; though we can form no distinct idea of what the arrangement was.
The door he was to place in the side; and to make “ lower, second, and third (sc. , cells),” i. e. , three distinct stories.
Gen 6:17-21 Noah was to build this ark, because God was about to bring a flood upon the earth, and would save him, with his family, and one pair of every kind of animal. מבּוּל, (the flood), is an archaic word, coined expressly for the waters of Noah (Isa 54:9), and is used nowhere else except Psa 29:10. הארץ על מים is in apposition to mabbul : “ I bring the flood, waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is a living breath ” (i.
e. , man and beast). With Noah, God made a covenant. On בּרית see Gen 15:18. As not only the human race, but the animal world also was to be preserved through Noah, he was to take with him into the ark his wife, his sons and their wives, and of every living thing, of all flesh, two of every sort, a male and a female, to keep them alive; also all kinds of food for himself and family, and for the sustenance of the beasts.
Gen 6:17-21 Noah was to build this ark, because God was about to bring a flood upon the earth, and would save him, with his family, and one pair of every kind of animal. מבּוּל, (the flood), is an archaic word, coined expressly for the waters of Noah (Isa 54:9), and is used nowhere else except Psa 29:10. הארץ על מים is in apposition to mabbul : “ I bring the flood, waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is a living breath ” (i.
e. , man and beast). With Noah, God made a covenant. On בּרית see Gen 15:18. As not only the human race, but the animal world also was to be preserved through Noah, he was to take with him into the ark his wife, his sons and their wives, and of every living thing, of all flesh, two of every sort, a male and a female, to keep them alive; also all kinds of food for himself and family, and for the sustenance of the beasts.
Gen 6:17-21 Noah was to build this ark, because God was about to bring a flood upon the earth, and would save him, with his family, and one pair of every kind of animal. מבּוּל, (the flood), is an archaic word, coined expressly for the waters of Noah (Isa 54:9), and is used nowhere else except Psa 29:10. הארץ על מים is in apposition to mabbul : “ I bring the flood, waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is a living breath ” (i.
e. , man and beast). With Noah, God made a covenant. On בּרית see Gen 15:18. As not only the human race, but the animal world also was to be preserved through Noah, he was to take with him into the ark his wife, his sons and their wives, and of every living thing, of all flesh, two of every sort, a male and a female, to keep them alive; also all kinds of food for himself and family, and for the sustenance of the beasts.
Gen 6:17-21 Noah was to build this ark, because God was about to bring a flood upon the earth, and would save him, with his family, and one pair of every kind of animal. מבּוּל, (the flood), is an archaic word, coined expressly for the waters of Noah (Isa 54:9), and is used nowhere else except Psa 29:10. הארץ על מים is in apposition to mabbul : “ I bring the flood, waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is a living breath ” (i.
e. , man and beast). With Noah, God made a covenant. On בּרית see Gen 15:18. As not only the human race, but the animal world also was to be preserved through Noah, he was to take with him into the ark his wife, his sons and their wives, and of every living thing, of all flesh, two of every sort, a male and a female, to keep them alive; also all kinds of food for himself and family, and for the sustenance of the beasts.
Gen 6:17-21 Noah was to build this ark, because God was about to bring a flood upon the earth, and would save him, with his family, and one pair of every kind of animal. מבּוּל, (the flood), is an archaic word, coined expressly for the waters of Noah (Isa 54:9), and is used nowhere else except Psa 29:10. הארץ על מים is in apposition to mabbul : “ I bring the flood, waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is a living breath ” (i.
e. , man and beast). With Noah, God made a covenant. On בּרית see Gen 15:18. As not only the human race, but the animal world also was to be preserved through Noah, he was to take with him into the ark his wife, his sons and their wives, and of every living thing, of all flesh, two of every sort, a male and a female, to keep them alive; also all kinds of food for himself and family, and for the sustenance of the beasts.